Crystal
Palace winger Puncheon, who played under Warnock at QPR, took to social
media to make accusations against his former manager after being upset by his comments on radio station talkSPORT.

Puncheon was furious at Warnock who was critical of his bizarre penalty miss at Tottenham
last Saturday. He later deleted another tweet which questioned the 65-year-old's integrity but Warnock's lawyers could still take action.

The
FA are also considering stepping in to take action as they are having a
clampdown on Twitter and any offensive remarks or tweets that bring the
game into disrepute.

Puncheon, who claimed he would accept some banter and opinions, wrote: "As a man I will live with that, which is fine, but I will not live with [Warnock's] opinion." He then went on to make a series of serious allegations against Warnock.

But former Leeds and Crystal Palace boss Warnock told Mirror Sport: "I've been made
aware of the tweets. I know nothing about what he is alleging. The matter is being addressed directly with him."

And he added: "I want to say that I have no idea of what he is talking about. I can confirm nothing like this has taken place and I have since noticed he's removed his tweets."

Puncheon's representatives declined to comment further but it is believed Palace urged him to take down another tweet but it had already been widely copied and retweeted.

The spat on Twitter came after Warnock said on air yesterday morning that he would not have chosen Puncheon to take the penalty
in "a million years."

Warnock said: "I think Jason has done brilliant. When he came with me, he didn't
get much of a look-in at QPR when he came on loan at Southampton. But in fairness to the boy he's been brilliant in the last couple of years.

"It's
alright speaking after the event, but from having him in training there's no way I would have trusted him with a penalty. You have to have someone a little bit more cool and collected and he's not like that. Jason can whack a 35 yard free-kick in here and there but a penalty with all the pressure on him at a place like White Hart Lane? Not in a million years for me.

"I think the centre-half might have done. Obviously he never meant to put it up there. But it was a massive blow because they were really bossing the game then and they could have been one or two up a half-time."